complete disassemble is not the same thing as a flush.
A flush is like an oil change.
You are getting rid of your old coolant, and replacing it with new.
Complete diassemble would be you relooping the entire rig up.
You dont really need to do a complete diassemble, however a flush is recomended every 6months to 1yr depending on your coolant and usage.
If I can get away with just flushing then that's not too bad. Recommend running some clean dH2O through for a bit before readding coolant + any additives?
what i will do is empty the res out.
The fill, bleed, and empty right away again.
Fill and rebleed...
I repeat this about 2-3 times... and then on the 4th one, or when i notice no particles or anything stop coming out, or the water is just clear clean, then i do the final fill and bleed.
Why don't loops have filters for this kind of thing?
Every commercial product that I've used (high power amplifiers, lasers) that's watercooled has a very strong filtering system to keep the coolant debris free.
Why don't loops have filters for this kind of thing?
Every commercial product that I've used (high power amplifiers, lasers) that's watercooled has a very strong filtering system to keep the coolant debris free.
not to mention, if it's a sealed loop, where is this debris coming from?
cost of flow.. also the the long run, the cost isnt worth it.
You should be doing at least a flush.
Aftermarket coolant.
Im not talking about just me... im using the average person.
Also who knows u might of missed something on the cleaning.
Flow should not be a problem with a properly sized filter though. The flow in computer water cooling systems is minuscule!
It would not matter anyways even if I could use water cooling - six months is a LONG time to go without changing out major components.![]()
It would not matter anyways even if I could use water cooling - six months is a LONG time to go without changing out major components.![]()
LuLz...
<3 Koolance Quick Disconnects. ()
id think id die if i didnt have them.
Gillbot knows firsthand exactly how painful ATI has been to me lately.
:hmm:
Sad thing is I usually have to swap out parts because they get physically damaged. Yesterday a full 4U Xeon server that was loaded with 15K drives fell over. The box is fine but the bottom five hot swap trays are nearly impossible to pull out because something get bent in the fall. I'm afraid to turn it on.![]()
Can't you strap your PC down? or did someone forget to?
not to mention, if it's a sealed loop, where is this debris coming from?
all my stuff is clear. my GPU block is gold-plated copper under acrylic. everything looks good? don't see any particles flowing (or maybe its just a uniform concentration at this point heh)